American anthropologist
Ellen Dissanayake[pronunciation?] (born Ellen Franzen), an American anthropologist and writer focusing on art and culture.[1] She lives in Seattle, Washington, and is affiliated with the University of Washington.[2]
- ^
From the preface to 1995's edition of her 1992 Homo Aestheticus:"At first glance, the fact that the arts and related aesthetic attitudes vary so widely from one society to another would seem to suggest that they are wholly learned or "cultural" in origin rather than, as I will show, also biological or "natural". One can make an analogy with language: learning to speak is a universal, innate predisposition for all children even though individual children learn the particular language of the people among whom they are nurtured. Similarly, art can be regarded as a natural, general proclivity that manifests itself in culturally learned specifics such as dances, songs, performances, visual display, and poetic speech."
- ^ Ellen Dissanayake, "University of Washington, School of Music, Affiliate Professor"